The official White House talking points on the mysterious Sestak job offer have been released. The gist - they never discussed Secretary of the Navy with Sestak, the chosen emissary was Bill Clinton, and the "jobs" were unpaid advisory board positions which would have allowed Sestak to raise his profile and keep his House seat. Early press coverage (contra some later stuff) does suggest that the contact with Sestak was indirect, so the Clinton connection may actually be the truth (or at least part of it). And Sestak was a Hillary supporter, so one presumes a Clinton bond was forged during the Clinton Administration when Sestak was on the NSC.
Now, Bill Clinton is not "the White House", so recent Politico coverage such as this becomes puzzling:
Rep. Joe Sestak, winner of the Pennsylvania Democratic Senate primary, is refusing to provide more information on what job he was offered by a White House official to drop of that race, although he confirmed again that the incident occurred.
The White House was backing incumbent Sen. Arlen Specter (D-Pa.) in the primary. Sestak acknowledged in an interview in February that he was offered a position by an unnamed White House official - a potential violation of federal law - but has not offered any specifics on conversation.
So why do they think the job offer came from a White House official? I am not going to be able to track down every utterance of Sestak, but he was a bit vague in his "bombshell" interview with Larry Kane and my understanding is that he has not advanced the story since them. Here is some early coverage from Feb 20, 2010 which tilts Sestak's way:
In the face of a White House denial, U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak stuck to his story yesterday that the Obama administration offered him a "high-ranking" government post if he would not run against U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter in Pennsylvania's Democratic primary.
"I was asked a direct question . . . and I answered it honestly," Sestak said in a Fox News interview. "There's nothing more to go into."
Sestak made his startling claim Thursday during the taping of Comcast Network's Larry Kane: Voice of Reason, a public affairs show televised on Sunday evenings.
"Were you ever offered a federal job to get out of this race?" Kane asked near the end of the 30-minute interview.
"Yes," Sestak answered.
"Was it Navy secretary?" Kane asked.
"No comment," Sestak replied.
In response to follow-up questions from the host, Sestak said the job was offered by the White House. He also nodded when asked if the offer was for a high-ranking post.
Here is the Fox coverage; it sounds like a windy "no comment, but if someone could find that Fox transcript and dump it in the comments that would be lovely.
Let's note that nodding when asked if the job was offered by the White House is not the same as saying the offer came from a White House official; if Clinton met him as a White House emissary, Sestak's response would have been reasonable. We also note this:
The Washington Post reported yesterday [link] that Sestak, in a separate interview Thursday about White House pressure, said, "There has been some indirect means in which they were trying to offer things if I got out."
And the initial Philadelphia Inquirer coverage was more clear about the haziness of the contact:
After yesterday's taping, Sestak said he recalled the White House offer coming in July, as he was preparing to formally announce his Senate candidacy in August. He declined to identify who spoke to him or the job under discussion. Sestak also would not say whether the person who approached him worked for the administration or was an intermediary for the offer.
"I'm not going to say who or how and what was offered," Sestak said in an interview. "I don't feel it's appropriate to go beyond what I said," because the conversation was confidential.
Well, Sestak didn't say it was not a White House official. But it was clever of him to leave the door open for Clinton even last February.
As I read this, Sestak told the WaPo that the approach was indirect; he was vague with everyone else, but (at least initially) does not seem to have claimed that the approach came directly from a White House official.
All helpful for the Dems, and one can see why Sestak wants to leave his former C-in-C out of it.
Moneyrunner, I'm reprinting this from your blogspot (and thank you):
US Code -- Section 600: Promise of employment or other benefit for political activity"), it is clear that any offer of a job "directly or indirectly ... to any person as consideration, favor, or reward for any political activity ... in connection with any general or special election to any political office, or in connection with any primary election" is an illegal act.
Posted by: BR | May 29, 2010 at 04:37 AM
Ha, does this mean in any impeachment proceeding, Biden, Pelosi, Byrd, Hillary, Geithner, Gates, Holder et al, would have to recuse themselves, since they would gain the job of POTUS?
And then there's the clean hands doctrine :)
Posted by: BR | May 29, 2010 at 04:45 AM
If job offers is Obama's currency, perhaps Bill Clinton received more than one JO to convey: one to Sestak and as payment, one to Hillary. Who knows, maybe Hillary even suggested the whole thing!
Posted by: BR | May 29, 2010 at 05:00 AM
Moneyrunner, this one's for you and your priceless MSM deepthroat line:
Posted by: BR | May 29, 2010 at 05:17 AM
What I don't get is, if the WH really wanted him out of the race, why didn't they just offer him an immediate full time job, without conditions? He couldn't very well take it AND run for Senate. I don't see how that could be illegal.
Posted by: Ralph L | May 29, 2010 at 07:14 AM
In the course of one day, the perception of Sestak has gone from honest guy to big fat liar.
Ann, the podcast has been posted at You Too
Posted by: Jane says obamasucks | May 29, 2010 at 08:13 AM
The WaPo has the Clinton admission on page 1 today and the editors put in their 2cents....
The tenor is the White House should have cleared things up earlier but nothing happened. No big deal. Republicans are trying to make it a big deal..but it is not.
That is the tenor anyway.
This outrage has not been selected.
Posted by: Janet | May 29, 2010 at 08:22 AM
Hmmmm Well here is an interesting tidbit from the Examiner LUN
Sestak was ineligible for the job that Clinton offered.
and
So far, there has been little discussion of the fact that the Bauer statement said “options for executive branch service were raised with [Sestak].” The plural “options”
I think you raised that point Jane...
Posted by: Janet | May 29, 2010 at 08:39 AM
LUN is the WaPo article and here is the editorial.
Posted by: Janet | May 29, 2010 at 09:09 AM
TopsecretK9 and Clarice:
Hhhhmmm - from Real Clear Politics in June of 2009 comes a lengthy article about Sestak.
I found this paragraph particularly interesting:
Wasn't an Intel Board mentioned in the carrot that Bubba supposedly dangled before him?
Also, read the whole article, which goes back to my theory that Sestak held the winning hand in the game of poker he was playing with the Obama crew. The article references some of his own prior experience with getting a candidate out of a race - HIS congressional race!
And, there is also this:
Somehow, he strikes me as someone who knows exactly what his doing.
Posted by: centralcal | May 29, 2010 at 10:42 AM
Sorry - forgot to link the article I was referencing.
Sestak: Damn the Torpedoes
Posted by: centralcal | May 29, 2010 at 10:43 AM
The best part is that Sestak never reported the contacts to the FBI or FEC... any contact regarding a job in exchange for not running in one position to continue running in another (as a Representative) is a deal of a job for political favor.
When one does not report such contact that is a crime.
When one works to cover up such contact that is also a crime.
Sestak may have the chips, but the next round has already dealt him a couple of jokers. And those cards are not pretty ones to have in your hand considering who else is at the table... and the last pot of chips have a lot of IOUs in it to not get any attention in the FBI or FEC to look into this. And he doesn't get to walk away from this table no matter how much he wishes to as he is now bought and paid for. What a tangled and nasty web conspiracy becomes.
And its the cover-up that kills you.
Posted by: ajacksonian | May 29, 2010 at 11:51 AM
I agree completely with your thoughts ajacksonian. However, this isn't a Republican scandal, it is a Democrat one - so I don't think anyone will look into anything. Alas.
Posted by: centralcal | May 29, 2010 at 12:13 PM
Except for Cent, NOW he's running for senate as a complete liar. Not a good chess move.
Posted by: Topsecretk9 | May 29, 2010 at 12:20 PM
So Setak got an offer of a place on the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board, which is made up of "individuals who are not employed by the Federal Government" that don't get paid. Sure.
Bring on the “Special Persecutor“
Posted by: Neo | May 29, 2010 at 01:32 PM
Ah, Tops, but chess and poker are two different games! I say the players at the poker table were all crooks and cheaters, so it didn't matter who walked away with the kitty. (If it WAS Sestak, he will forever have to watch his back - heh!)
But, now, the chess game - getting elected and respected, that is yet to be determined. Toomey may yet checkmate!
Posted by: centralcal | May 29, 2010 at 03:43 PM
Just an additional fact from the Pennsylvania talk show host who asked Sestak the job question in February. he said that he called the White House communications office and played the Sestak interview and asked for their comments so he could get both sides. The person answering the phone listened and told him someone would call him right back. In a short while another person called him back and again said someone would get back with a response. What this talk host found incredible was that 11 hours later someone finally got back to him and said it wasn't true!!! I heard Mark Levin read this account on his show Friday night.
Posted by: jan | June 01, 2010 at 04:06 PM